Have Countries with Lax Environmental Regulations a Comparative Advantage in Polluting Industries?
Abstract
We aim to study whether lax environmental regulations induce comparative advantages, causing
the least-regulated countries to specialize in polluting industries. The study is based on Trefler and Zhu’s
(2005) definition of the factor content of trade. For the econometrical analysis, we use a cross-section of
71 countries in 2000 to examine the net exports in the most polluting industries. We try to overcome three
weaknesses in the empirical literature: the measurement of environmental endowments or environmental
stringency, the possible endogeneity of the explanatory variables, and the influence of the industrial level
of aggregation. As a result, we do find some evidence in favor of the pollution-haven effect. The
exogeneity of the environmental endowments was rejected in several industries, and we also find that
industrial aggregation matters.
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Date
2009-12-04Author
Quiroga, Miguel
Sterner, Thomas
Persson, Martin
Keywords
comparative advantage
environmental regulation
trade
pollution haven
Porter hypothesis
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
412
Language
eng